“这是关于我们彼此之间建立的联系”:2019冠状病毒病大流行期间管理医疗保健的复原力和风险转化

IF 5 2区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Bert de Graaff , Sabrina Huizenga , Roland Bal
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在本文中,我们重点关注COVID-19大流行期间医疗保健管理中的风险转化。我们这样做是为了将医疗系统的危机复原力作为一种具体的实践来探索。我们在本文中建立了2020年3月至2022年8月期间荷兰医疗保健危机组织的多站点人种志。我们放大了荷兰大流行第二年(2021年8月至2022年8月)期间的区域急性护理提供网络。我们的分析强调了COVID-19大流行是如何通过多种风险关系在医疗保健领域形成的。这些关系通过建立关系、数据基础设施、建模和情景构建、(重新)编写指导方针和协议,以及正式的政治实践,在危机治理的制度层面之间进行转化。我们认为,危机期间的风险转换允许创建特定的治理对象和基础设施,如护理(急性/“非covid”)、地理(“该地区”)和材料(“icu床”)。风险转化似乎是弹性医疗系统的关键实践;强调临时的、非正式的和手工的风险工作,这些工作在医疗保健治理层和新兴的集体行动之间协调关于如何在危机期间采取行动的知识和价值。这些做法本质上是政治性的,导致(替代)关注及其代表在危机期间管理医疗保健时被纳入或排除。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
‘It's about the connections we've made with each other’: resilience and risk translation in governing healthcare during the COVID-19 pandemic
In this paper we focus on risk translation in the governing of healthcare during the COVID-19 pandemic. We do so to explore crisis resilience in healthcare systems as a concrete practice. We build in this paper on a multi-sited ethnography of the Dutch crisis-organization in healthcare between March 2020 and August 2022. We zoom-in on regional networks of acute care delivery (ROAZ) during the second year of the pandemic in the Netherlands (from August 2021 to August 2022). Our analysis underscores how the COVID-19 pandemic in healthcare is enacted through a multitude of relations of risk. These relations are translated between institutional layers of crisis governance through relation-building, data-infrastructures, modelling and scenario-building, (re)writing guidelines and protocols, next to formal political practices. We argue that risk translation during crises allows for creating specific objects and infrastructures of governance such as care (acute/‘non-COVID’), geographies (‘the region’) and materials (‘an ICU-bed’). Risk translation appears as a crucial practice for resilient healthcare systems; emphasizing the ad hoc, informal and manual risk work that mediates knowledge and values about how to act during crisis between layers of healthcare governance and emerging collective(s) (in) action. These practices are inherently political, leading to the in- or exclusion of (alternative) concerns and their representatives in governing healthcare during crisis.
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来源期刊
Social Science & Medicine
Social Science & Medicine PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
9.10
自引率
5.60%
发文量
762
审稿时长
38 days
期刊介绍: Social Science & Medicine provides an international and interdisciplinary forum for the dissemination of social science research on health. We publish original research articles (both empirical and theoretical), reviews, position papers and commentaries on health issues, to inform current research, policy and practice in all areas of common interest to social scientists, health practitioners, and policy makers. The journal publishes material relevant to any aspect of health from a wide range of social science disciplines (anthropology, economics, epidemiology, geography, policy, psychology, and sociology), and material relevant to the social sciences from any of the professions concerned with physical and mental health, health care, clinical practice, and health policy and organization. We encourage material which is of general interest to an international readership.
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